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| Here we go again FFS http://www.taxi-driver.co.uk/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=28916 |
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| Author: | captain cab [ Thu Apr 07, 2016 11:03 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Here we go again FFS |
Minicab driver 'forced 15-year-old girl who was regularly attacked by a gang of Asian men to perform a sex act on him in the back of his cab and then raped her when she tried to escape' A minicab driver forced a 15-year-old girl to give him oral sex in the back of his cab and then raped her when she tried to leave, a jury heard today. In a video interview played to the jury sitting on the trial of alleged sexual exploitation of young girls by a group of seven Asian men in Oxford, a woman told a detective how she was repeatedly abused by Assad Hussain. The alleged victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, told the detective how on the first occasion Assad, now aged 35 years, drove the teenager to a dark lane before parking up and climbing into the back seat with her. The panel of seven men and five women heard that he asked her if she had ever performed 'jupa' or oral sex and she said 'yes.' 'I felt that if I said no that I would be pressured. I just went along with it. He's then given me a kiss and he's got in the front and driven to the gates. 'It was dark and about 10.30pm to 11pm at night' said the girl. 'There's no street lights. He's turned off the car lights. He's then got back into the back with me and started kissing me,' The young woman then told the interviewers in detail how she performed a sex act before being raped in the back of his minicab. She was not, she said, on birth control and Hussain allegedly was not wearing a condom. She described the man as being short, fat and greasy and told the officer that Assad, also known as Ash, smelled bad. The woman alleging she was routinely raped and sexually abused by a group of Asian men over a period of almost 10 years also told a detective in a police interview how members of the gang introduced her to Class A drugs. The same girl described how she would then smoke crack cocaine and heroin before performing oral sex. She said when she was given heroin by defendant Naim Khan to 'look after' that she thought she was in a relationship with him. In the footage played to the court she said: 'He asked me to look after it because he said he couldn't take it home. I had taken it for brownie points. 'I was a girl seeing a man who was older and from what I thought he had a lot of money because he was able to buy loads of heroin. I saw him as a big gangster and he was trusting me with this.' She then told the officer how in the second period of the abuse, when she was in her early 20s, that members of the group tracked her down in Oxford and threatened to kill her if she reported them to the police. The jury heard how she threatened to report the men to police but was told by Akhtar Dogar he would kill her if she did. The pair were then picked up by Assad Hussain, who drove them out of Oxford, leaving her baby son with a friend. She said: 'Akhtar Dogar told me in no uncertain terms he would make sure that if I ever reported anything to the police that I couldn't and wouldn't because he would kill me. She said that Hussain drove them to into the countryside outside of Oxford. 'We got out the car and they walked me to an area where there was softer ground. It was muddy. He said there was a body. 'And said this was where the last person who talked was. I thought I was going to die.' Prosecutor Stuart Trimmer QC said: 'The first girl described herself as dirty and ashamed. She felt a bit like a prostitute except she hadn't agreed to it. She feared the repercussions of defying the group. 'She had seen one girl punched so hard in the face by Akhtar Dogar that she fell motionless to the ground after stating that she wished to go home. 'He delivered an upper cut blow to her face that caused her nose to bleed profusely. He then kicked her body a few times and left her on the floor.' Mr Trimmer previously told the court: 'This case concerns the sexual exploitation of two vulnerable girls by a group of males.' Reading a statement by the alleged victim, who claims the abuse started in 1999 when she was just aged 15 years, he said: 'She was at times scared and afraid but they made her feel like she was worth knowing, 'I had something that these people were interested in. And for a young girl to have older men interested in her you can kind of turn a blind eye to the nasty sexual side.' Aside from the alleged sexual abuse, some of the defendants face charges of threats to kill and giving the girls heroin and crack cocaine. He added: 'Both girls were simply used by these defendants for entertainment. They were enticed into a world where they were not equipped to deal with the real intentions of these offenders. 'Once into the cycle of repeated abuse they had no ability, recognition or realistic means of extracting themselves from the activities. 'Both were cynically used by men as a group. Using drink and drugs they established some sort of relationship. That introduction had the effect of ensuring control. 'That control was reinforced by threats and involvement in shared criminal behaviour. Other men would be introduced and oral sex required. Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/ |
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| Author: | 187ums [ Fri Apr 08, 2016 12:46 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
Not taxi driver - Royal cars driver, no way any self respecting taxi driver would want to see his plate go up in smoke. Anyway innocent until proven guilty otherwise LEroy and his chums await. |
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| Author: | Nidge2 [ Fri Apr 08, 2016 6:46 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
187ums wrote: Not taxi driver - Royal cars driver, no way any self respecting taxi driver would want to see his plate go up in smoke. Anyway innocent until proven guilty otherwise LEroy and his chums await. He's got a bed waiting for him.
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| Author: | captain cab [ Fri Apr 08, 2016 9:58 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
187ums wrote: Not taxi driver - Royal cars driver, no way any self respecting taxi driver would want to see his plate go up in smoke. Anyway innocent until proven guilty otherwise LEroy and his chums await. thanks - article corrected |
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| Author: | trotskys twin [ Fri Apr 08, 2016 11:06 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
ONCE AGAIN ASIAN DRIVER ................DRUGS AND RAPING ...................TIME FOR A FULL PUBLIC INQUIRY. INNOCENT UNTIL PROVED GUILTY OF COURSE SO IF HE IS THE ABOVE APPLIES ???????????? |
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| Author: | Nidge2 [ Fri Apr 08, 2016 2:17 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
trotskys twin wrote: ONCE AGAIN ASIAN DRIVER ................DRUGS AND RAPING ...................TIME FOR A FULL PUBLIC INQUIRY. INNOCENT UNTIL PROVED GUILTY OF COURSE SO IF HE IS THE ABOVE APPLIES ???????????? They'll be found guilty there's no doubt about that. "Leroy where are you sir?" ![]()
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| Author: | 187ums [ Fri Apr 08, 2016 4:00 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
Three of them are already in jail btw, so is it additional jail time? Or run concurrently? Either way it's a long long time till they see daylight. Also I'm sure the three of them are already familiar with Leroy!! |
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| Author: | grandad [ Fri Apr 08, 2016 4:20 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
I can't see what all the fuss is about with oral sex. I think i would find talking about sex boring.
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| Author: | Nidge2 [ Fri Apr 08, 2016 5:47 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
grandad wrote: I can't see what all the fuss is about with oral sex. I think i would find talking about sex boring. ![]()
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| Author: | edders23 [ Fri Mar 13, 2020 7:07 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
interesting follow up article on operation bullfinch on BBc website https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-51467518 Nearly a decade after the abuse of vulnerable girls in Oxford began to be addressed, following years of negligence by police and social services, the last of the so-called Operation Bullfinch trials has ended. How did the sex offenders at the centre of the city's depraved underworld finally come to face justice? Oxford, 2011. For nearly a year detectives have been receiving reports of girls disappearing, some as young as 13, only to return days later, refusing to tell anyone where they had been. Sometimes they would be bruised, bleeding and half-naked. For the past few months a Thames Valley Police team has been investigating the cases, but making little headway. But in the early hours of 14 November, the man leading the small group, Det Insp Simon Morton, made a connection that would spark the biggest criminal investigation in the city's history. The senior investigating officer said he had just finished debriefing a surveillance team when the "penny dropped". As he sat in the police briefing room and stared at the names of suspects written on a whiteboard, Mr Morton suddenly realised he wasn't looking merely at a set of sexual predators, but a highly organised crime group. "I started scribbling like mad," he said. "In honesty, I was annoyed I hadn't seen it before - it was so bloody obvious." From that moment, detectives and social workers began to identify a web of offenders and expose a criminal enterprise that involved the grooming, trafficking and rape of vulnerable girls. The affluent university city was soon to learn of the world of sadistic sex abuse that had been flourishing in its eastern suburbs. Over the past decade and through six trials, 18 victims have recounted their experiences, leading to the convictions of 21 men for offences spanning the late 1990s to the late 2000s. Over seven years, dozens of jurors have heard how girls were "sucked into the vortex" of the gang. For legal reasons, the links between the trials could not be reported until the recent conclusion of the final court case. The men, mostly British citizens of Pakistani origin, operated in the Cowley Road area, where student digs sit alongside family homes, and ethnic food shops and pawnbrokers neighbour hip bars and vibrant restaurants. The group was organised. There were those tasked with grooming, there were runners and enforcers. There were "friendly" estate agents who allowed access to properties where the gang's victims would be "pimped out" as sexual commodities for their abusers' financial gain. The younger gang members would linger outside shops and parks chatting to the girls as they passed. Many from dysfunctional homes, these children would be treated like grown-ups, supplied with drugs and alcohol and, as one judge said, provided with a "sense of belonging, a sense of esteem". Such was the gang's hold over its victims, when one of the girls was left naked and abandoned after a gang rape, it was one of her abusers she phoned for help, not her social worker or the police. One 15-year-old victim, raped by gang ringleader Anjum Dogar and the case's most prolific offender Mohammed Karrar in 2004, told the BBC she had an abortion and did not know who the baby's father was. Mr Morton said the men's victims went from "one minute believing in Father Christmas and the Easter bunny and the next they are being sold" for sex. Unemployed Karrar would spend his days with his wife at his parents' house in Cowley and his nights with his girlfriend - when he was not carrying out horrific acts of child abuse. In 2005, he had two children by the two women, born less than two weeks apart. Dogar and his brother Akhtar, who "ruled the Cowley Road", were the ringleaders of the grooming gang and, according to the victims, the other gang members were scared of them. Some of the girls contracted sexually transmitted infections and became pregnant - or both - with one 12-year-old girl, who was branded with the initial of a man who claimed to "own her", being made to have a back-room abortion. The question for detectives was, if none of the girls would co-operate with social services and the police after they had been reported missing, how could their abusers be stopped? In Rotherham and Rochdale, similar grooming gangs were coming to light. Mr Morton visited the investigation team in Rotherham, swapping notes. One tactic Mr Morton's team used was to get consent from the parents of some victims to take the girls' underwear to be tested for DNA, to try to establish who was sexually abusing them. "We didn't start with any victims. No-one came forward... we had to find the victims and then find the offenders," Mr Morton said. "Normally we deal with things that are told to us, not things that aren't told to us." n a statement read at the sentencing of the final three defendants last month, Oxford Crown Court heard how one victim turned to crack cocaine to deal with the trauma she had experienced, which led her to a "life of crime" to fund her habit. She said: "I struggle to live a normal life day to day. I still have a fear of going outside. I feel my life has been taken away from me. "My life has been destroyed. I cannot form loving or lasting relationships with men. I have not been able to care for my children as a mother should be able to." The abuse survivor, now an adult, said for many years she never told anyone what had happened to her because she felt "scared and embarrassed". "This has ruined my chances of a normal life." The team checked missing persons files, care home, hospital and truancy records. Detectives managed to track down one woman who told officers she had been abused as a teenager. "I realised it was the same blokes she was talking about from six years earlier and it was then I realised the extent of the offending," Mr Morton said. "We were able to make the leap between the years and the fact they were so organised as a crime group. I was able to show it spanned all those years." After the first trial in 2013, seven men were jailed for crimes against six girls. Over the following years, men accused of similar crimes in Rochdale, Rotherham, Manchester, Newcastle and Telford would go on trial. The same day the first group of Oxford abusers was sentenced, 27 June 2013, Mr Morton retired from the force. The scale of the abuse was not reflected in the cases that came to court - a serious case review published in 2015 found as many as 373 children, including 50 boys, might have been targeted in Oxfordshire over a 16-year period. The review found "many errors" were made across the Thames Valley force and social services, both of which "failed to see that these children were being groomed in an organised way by groups of men". At the time, Mr Morton said there was "no hiding" from these failures, adding that "in some aspects, calls for help were ignored". Despite the lengthy prison sentences given to the seven men who were convicted in 2013, Det Ch Insp Mark Glover - who replaced Mr Morton as Operation Bullfinch's lead detective - knew "there was still a lot more work to do" investigating crimes that pre-dated those that were the focus of that trial. Mr Glover's colleague Det Insp Nicola Douglas said "it was almost like forming a queue" in bringing further cases to court. She said police had to be "really honest" with the victims, who could not "expect quick justice". She said victims they approached would often say "this girl called so-and-so was at the party" and provide the nicknames of the suspects. "Immediately, we knew this was Bullfinch-related. It was all the same names - they were names habitually victims spoke about." Due to the time that had passed, there was no CCTV evidence, nor were there social media or smartphone records to analyse. "It was about getting outside, tracking people down, finding all the records," said Mr Glover. Many of the victims who were identified did not want to give evidence. "We were knocking on people's doors, maybe professional people, who were married with families, and just the knocking on the door and saying, 'we're from Bullfinch'... it brings it all back to them," Mr Glover said. He said he believed his team approached between 250 and 300 women. About a dozen would give evidence over the five trials that followed the first court case. Senior crown prosecutor Clare Tucker said the cases were built on "a number of girls giving evidence of a similar nature about one particular man". "It was putting together a set of circumstances that the jury could comfortably be sure was believable and that was what had happened," she said. The prosecutor, who prepared the case files for every trial, said evidence of how girls had been "groomed over the years" was key to showing "they weren't really consenting, they were submitting". For Mr Morton, the investigation his team started has changed policing forever. "There's a crime category [child sexual exploitation] that in the past hadn't existed and all of sudden, once you realise that there's all this abuse going on in every city and nearly every town, it makes you realise how many victims there are out there - how many young girls are being picked off the street and turned into something they're not." Mr Glover, who retired in 2018 but returned to Thames Valley Police as a civilian investigator, accepts that the end of Operation Bullfinch is not the conclusion of this harrowing story. "There are a lot of men who have escaped justice," he said. "There's a lot of males out there who must be sweating a little bit because they know that we know." |
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| Author: | Sussex [ Fri Mar 13, 2020 9:07 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Here we go again FFS |
This whole episode of sexual exploitation is a stain on our country. And in many cases a stain on our trade.
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